I have a topological field K that admits a non-trivial continuous exponential function E, must every non-trivial continuous exponential function E′ on K be of the form E′(x)=E(r sigma(x)) for some r in K* and sigma in Aut(K/Q)? If not, can you explain for which fields other than R is this condition met?

gasavasiv

gasavasiv

Answered question

2022-11-01

I have a topological field K that admits a non-trivial continuous exponential function E, must every non-trivial continuous exponential function E′ on K be of the form E ( x ) = E ( r σ ( x ) ) for some r K* and σ A u t ( K / Q )?
If not, can you explain for which fields other than R is this condition met?

Answer & Explanation

Layne Murillo

Layne Murillo

Beginner2022-11-02Added 14 answers

It seems that as-stated, the answer is false. I'm not satisfied with the following counterexample, however, and I'll explain afterwards.
Take K = C and let E ( z ) = e z be the standard complex exponential. Take E ( z ) = e z ¯ = e z ¯ , where z ¯ is the complex conjugate of z. Then E′(z) is not of the form E(rz), and yet is a perfectly fine homomorphism from the additive to the multiplicative groups of C .
Here's why I'm not satisfied: you can take any automorphism of a field and cook up new exponentials by post-composition or pre-composition. In the case I mentioned, these two coincide.
Antwan Perez

Antwan Perez

Beginner2022-11-03Added 6 answers

This won't work in R because there are no nontrivial continuous automorphisms there. It would be interested in seeing an answer to a reformulation to this problem that reflected this.

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